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Thursday, July 27, 2017

Filipino Eric "The Naturally" Kelly sees move to lightweight in MMA.

Eric Kelly

Filipino mixed martial arts (MMA) veteran Eric “The Natural”
Kelly has been competing as a featherweight since he started his prizefighting
stint eight years ago in the flourishing Philippine combat scene.

After spending most of his career as a featherweight with 15
professional bouts, Kelly decided to venture into a new territory as he moves
up in another weight class.

The 35-year-old native of Baguio City, Benguet makes his
lightweight debut against Japanese MMA legend Kotetsu “No Face” Boku on the
undercard of ONE: KINGS & CONQUERORS, which takes place at the glamorous
Cotai Arena of The Venetian Macao in Macao, China. Kelly sees his jump to ONE Championship’s 77.1-kilogram
weight class as a new chapter in his illustrious run as a world-class MMA
athlete.

“It’s a new beginning for me. It’s somehow a permanent move
since this is my walking weight. We have to abide by the weigh-in rules of the
company. I am comfortable with the weight,” he said.

“I am excited to be in this new journey. I hope everything
will turn our great for me as a lightweight,” Kelly added.

Although Kelly’s last two outings as a featherweight
competitor resulted to throbbing setbacks inside the ONE Championship cage, he
looks to erase the painful memory by picking up a statement-making victory over
Boku in his maiden assignment as a lightweight.

“It's been a year since the last time that I fought. I am
looking forward to put on a great performance for my beloved country. I have
been training hard and going through strategies. I hope to give my 110 percent
inside the ONE Championship cage in Macao. I am coming to win,” he stated.

Fighting fire with fire

Even if Boku presents too much danger in the striking
department, Kelly has no qualms when it comes to trading kicks and punches with
the highly-touted Japanese combatant. With more than 30 professional matches on his resume, Boku
has the experience of a seasoned veteran and has seen it all whether it is
inside the cage or the ring. Always a crowd pleaser, Boku utilizes his dynamic boxing
background with well-regarded grappling arsenal to subdue his opponents.

“To tell you honestly, I am in a very tough fight. It’s
nerve-wracking in a sense, but I am ready to accept the challenge,” Kelly said
about the marquee match-up. “I want to trade strikes with my opponent. He is
dangerous in that aspect, but I can see some loopholes.” Kelly asserted that he has a fair share of knowledge in
terms of delivering blows from a toe-to-toe stance.

“I might be known for my submission wins, but I also have
striking in my skill-set,” he reminded.

Before becoming an MMA fighter, Kelly was first introduced
to Yaw-Yan, a Filipino style of kickboxing with emphasis on hip-torquing motion
and delivering attacks from long range as well as the downward-cutting nature
of its kicks.

After mastering Yaw-Yan, Kelly then transitioned to Wushu
Sanshou, where he represented the Philippines in various international
tournaments from 2001 to 2004. When Kelly started his MMA career in 2009, he has been
heavily regarded as a submission specialist, owning nine triumphs by way of
forcing his foes to tap. Kelly seeks to test his leverage over Boku, who tasted five
of his 11 career losses by way of submission.

“I am prepared wherever the fight goes. If there’s chance to
submit him, I will submit him. If there’s an opportunity to knock him out, I
will go for it,” he bared.

Resorting to his bread-and-butter is stylistically the
obvious option for Kelly, but he sets his sights on a knockout win. The last time that Kelly knocked out an opponent was in
August 2012 when he stopped former UFC lightweight titleholder Jens Pulver in
the second round with a left roundhouse kick to the body.

“I am looking for statement win this time around. Knocking
him out will be an accomplishment because he is a good fighter and a tough
opponent,” Kelly stressed.

While championship gold has always been his ultimate goal,
he does not want to rush into it like he would when he was younger.

Instead, Kelly wants to earn it one match at a time, and
that quest begins on 5 August by defeating Boku at ONE: KINGS & CONQUERORS.

“A world title can wait. Right now, I have to redeem myself
in front of my countrymen and cement my status as one of the best lightweights
on the planet today. I might be 35 years old, but I am not giving up. I am here
to stay,” he ended.

ONE Championship is the largest sports media property in
Asian history. Headquartered in Singapore, the world’s most exciting mixed
martial arts organization hosts the largest sports entertainment events across
Asia featuring the best Asian mixed martial artists and world champions, all
signed to exclusive contracts, on the largest media broadcast in Asia. ONE
Championship is broadcast to over 1 billion viewers across 128 countries around
the world with some of the largest global broadcasters, including FOX Sports,
Setanta, MNC, Astro, Thairath TV, ABS-CBN, TV5, MYTV, HTV, OSN and more. (PR)